As Below, So Above : Apocalypticism, Gnosticism and the Scribes of Qumran and Nag Hammadi
معرفی کتاب «As Below, So Above : Apocalypticism, Gnosticism and the Scribes of Qumran and Nag Hammadi» نوشتهٔ Glen J. Fairen، منتشرشده توسط نشر Gorgias Press در سال 2009. این کتاب در 6 صفحه، فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
After questioning the scholarly assumptions regarding the "heretical" Nag Hammadi Library and the "apocalyptic" Dead Sea Scrolls, Fairen will argue that they were not diametrically opposed, but represent a scribal reconfiguration of an Enochic worldview as a critique of foreign rule. Considering that the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library were discovered within the same decade, it is unsurprising that scholars have compared the two collections. Despite being the products of different centuries and consisting of a wide range of diverse material, the potential these collections have to significantly alter reconstructions of Jewish and Christian history of Late Antiquity is staggering. Unfortunately, despite this potential, scholarly comparisons have done little beyond reinforce the self-defining discourses of “orthodoxy” and “heresy.” In examining the academic discourse concerning these two collections, As Below, So Above argues that scholars have used the “Apocalyptic” Dead Sea Scrolls as a cipher for that which should or could be legitimately Christian and the “Gnostic” Nag Hammadi Library as that which should not or cannot be legitimately Christian. In particular, by incorporating a mythical narrative that sees Christianity as the inheritor of the salvation history of ancient Israel and as such “unique” in Late Antiquity, scholarship has created two binary categories; Apocalypticism as a way of linking “unique” Christianity to the prestigious pedigree of Judaism, and Gnosticism as a way to quarantine “heretical” expressions that threaten this uniqueness. Exploring the socio-political context of the Ancient Near and Middle East under Greco-Roman rule, this book argues that the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library are not diametrically opposed, but are linked by a shared and Enochic worldview that was used by marginalized elements of the Near and Middle Eastern scribal class who were reacting to the cessation of native rule and the lack of a royal patron under Hellenism. TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ABBREVIATIONS 1 INTRODUCTION 2. APOCALYPSES, APOCALYPTICS AND APOCALYPTICISMS 3. THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS AS A CIPHER FOR JUDAISM 4. GNOSTICISM AS THE HERETICAL BOOGEYMAN 5. THE ANTI-CANON OF THE NAG HAMMADI LIBRARY 6. PROPHETS, SCRIBES AND THE BOOK OF WATCHERS AT QUMRAN AND NAG HAMMADI 7. CONCLUSION BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX OF SUBJECTS INDEX OF NAMES INDEX OF ANCIENT TEXTS Introduction -- Apocalypses, Apocalyptics And Apocalypticisms -- The Dead Sea Scrolls As A Cipher For Judaism -- Gnosticism As The Heretical Boogey-man -- The Anti-canon Of The Nag Hammadi Library -- Prophets, Scribes, And The Book Of Watchers At Qumran And Nag Hammadi -- Conclusion. Glen J. Fairen. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 171-181) And Indexes.
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Questioning the scholarly assumptions regarding the "heretical" Nag Hammadi Library and the "apocalyptic" Dead Sea Scrolls, Fairen argues that they were not diametrically opposed, but represent a scribal reconfiguration of an Enochic worldview as a critique of foreign rule.